Unfortunately it's the unhelpful statement of earn and/or save more. Obviously two incomes are better than one as well. If you're desperate to get into owning over renting and on the lower end of income then there's always Shared Ownership for new builds, should make it easier to at least start somewhere and gain equity, though I confess to not knowing the ins and outs of it.been looking into properties again
so ive managed to find out what income i need, didn't realize it was quite easy to find out, so going by what banks would lend me, how do people get on the property ladder when im not earning enough ? and ive been with my job for 15 years, and i still cant get enough
i wish i saved all that money now![]()
Can planning issues be searched by a solicitor themselves rather than waiting for LA to do it?Searches can flag up all sorts from planning issues right through to having to pay for the upkeep of a church.
To be honest, for a property that old, I’d want to be doing as much due diligence as I could before buying.
To be honest even a straight forward sale can take months these days, I imagine your going to be very close to that deadline.
I know, we have no way of being confident of doing it. It's just that there's an annoyingly large amount of cash at stake, so much so that I have to push it as hard as I can.
The property is vacant and he wants to sell ASAP so just got to do our best.
Wish it wasn't this way, honestly.
I think it's a fairly normally feeling that once someone accepts an offer from you, you start thinking about all the negatives and wondering why someone else hasn't come along to pay more than you.Need some advice.
We’ve had an offer accepted, offer accepted on her place. Mortgage approved. Basically should be good to go in five or six weeks!
However, I’m not convinced the house is right. It’s not what we first started looking at, ones we bid on last year had 15+ offers. This one had 2. It’s a lot smaller than the others but then again it’ll just be me and her. The area is so much nicer than others but then obviously it’s a smaller house. I just have niggles. It hasn’t got the original period features we want. It’s not got a driveway. But it has good views. Not sure if this is normal nerves or something more... part of me thinks I’d be like with this the perfect house, I’m spending pretty much all my savings on it (though do have a flat which is 50% paid off).
I think this is a three-five year house at the most but feel we’ve overpaid for it based on that. If I’m honest I bid what I bid because I didn’t expect to get it, but the fact there was so little interest is telling.
we’ve spoken about it a few times and I always come round and appreciate we can’t afford the house we want in the area we want do something has to give. She’s ended up in tears as she reckons it’s not happening anymore and I’m in the spare bed....
I have a good friend that always tells me you can change the house but you can't change the area, and he's not wrong. You can make some changes to the house and make it feel like the home you want to live in (ok, can't likely add a driveway, but you get the idea). My partner and I are currently doing exactly this, buying a much smaller property but in the right area - desirable, good schools, great transport links, not to close to the city etc etc. THe house we were buying last year was much larger but in a not so great location.Need some advice.
We’ve had an offer accepted, offer accepted on her place. Mortgage approved. Basically should be good to go in five or six weeks!
However, I’m not convinced the house is right. It’s not what we first started looking at, ones we bid on last year had 15+ offers. This one had 2. It’s a lot smaller than the others but then again it’ll just be me and her. The area is so much nicer than others but then obviously it’s a smaller house. I just have niggles. It hasn’t got the original period features we want. It’s not got a driveway. But it has good views. Not sure if this is normal nerves or something more... part of me thinks I’d be like with this the perfect house, I’m spending pretty much all my savings on it (though do have a flat which is 50% paid off).
I think this is a three-five year house at the most but feel we’ve overpaid for it based on that. If I’m honest I bid what I bid because I didn’t expect to get it, but the fact there was so little interest is telling.
we’ve spoken about it a few times and I always come round and appreciate we can’t afford the house we want in the area we want do something has to give. She’s ended up in tears as she reckons it’s not happening anymore and I’m in the spare bed....
Just had to pull out of a house purchase because of a down valuation and therefore couldn't really get a mortgage.
Have just had a message from my solicitors asking if they find another buyer would I be prepared to sell my search results. Not sure how this really affects me?
I know, we have no way of being confident of doing it. It's just that there's an annoyingly large amount of cash at stake, so much so that I have to push it as hard as I can.
Wish it wasn't this way, honestly.
Sounds like we're in the same situation as you guys. FTBs, buying freehold from landlords. We want to push our solicitors but we 'only' instructed them on 16th April. Seller's tenants moved out last week, our solicitors haven't received a contract from sellers but haven't told us what else they've been doing in the meantime... They are responsive at least but we're worried they're just waiting. Last week she said she "wasn't worried, yet" about completing before end June...I've told our solicitors that completing after 30th June isn't an option... But I'm still getting a little nervous at the moment as it's money (potential stamp duty fee) that we could really benefit from with doing what needs doing in the house!
Sounds like we're in the same situation as you guys. FTBs, buying freehold from landlords. We want to push our solicitors but we 'only' instructed them on 16th April. Seller's tenants moved out last week, our solicitors haven't received a contract from sellers but haven't told us what else they've been doing in the meantime... They are responsive at least but we're worried they're just waiting. Last week she said she "wasn't worried, yet" about completing before end June...
Does anyone have a fair idea of what the solicitors should be doing in terms of process/order? lol, loaded question I know... But surely they can be starting the searches etc?
Had the girlfriend in earlier shouting that she doesn't want to ***** £15k down the drain to the government for no reason whatsoever. What a farce![]()
They have the sales memorandum, I thought that was the point of thatGenerally speaking solicitors won't start doing anything until they've received the contract and pack from the sellers. Without it there isn't much indication that you are actually buying the place apart from your word so why do work or send of for searches when they don't even have the property details and the sellers solicitors haven't made contact.
Have you made your target completion explicitly and abundantly clear? There isn't much else you can do but if that isn't logged as a target completion (alongside all the caveats) then you're going to wear yourself down. June was always going to dicey no matter what. You have a couple of bank holidays to deal with as well.They have the sales memorandum, I thought that was the point of that
We heard from the agent today that the sellers had posted (!!) their paperwork back to their solicitors last week but it has not arrived yet. Bloody stupid pensioners, they only live 11min drive from their solicitors
Once we hit May this is going to get very stressful, we will be going back to the agent to whip the sellers into shape and perhaps remind them subtly that it would be cheaper for us to pull out rather than stump up £15k extra stamp duty if they continue to delay things for no reason.
It seems no-one can really predict how long this stuff takes. My friend completed in 6 weeks (in a chain) last time he bought...